Have you been forced to travel?
AIMSI have spoke to several women who have travelled to the UK to get the birth they wanted as they do not meet State criteria here. AIMSI are documenting these stories and others. Have you been forced to travel? We'd like to hear from you!
Please contact us at support@aimsireland.com or chair@aimsireland.com
Friday, 3 May 2013
Wednesday, 1 May 2013
"The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013" : Removing the Woman, in Rights and in Name. (updated 2/5)
"The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013": Removing the Woman, in Rights and in Name.
Over the last few months, Ireland has been gripped by debates surrounding abortion.
The failure to legislate despite two referendums from the Irish people, despite a push from the ECHR to legislate, all came to a head following the unnecessary and tragic death of Savita Halappanavar, who died of sepsis during an inevitable miscarriage, despite requests for an abortion. A whirlwind of debate ensued and finally, last week, we were told the end was near; that draft legislation would be soon.
The speculation has been emotive, intense, and constant. The silence and wait nearly unbearable. There was nearly a collective sigh of relief, when it was announced legislation would be published by the Summer and then, apprehension as the Government indicated it would follow the terms outlined in the X case. Where would the compromises lie?
Legislating for abortion under the terms of the 'X Case' was always going to be restrictive. The X case recognizes the right to an abortion where a pregnant woman's life is at risk, including suicide, as a result of her pregnancy. No right to autonomy. No right to bodily integrity. No right to choice in instances of rape, incest, health, or any other area. But there was still ground to play for, and the rumour mill was on high alert.
This week, The Labour Party and Fine Gael hashed out the details through what we believe were intense negotiations. We heard rumours of 'bottom lines'. We hoped legislation would be woman-centred.
During negotiations, something happened. Something almost subtle but yet so pointed.....Something so poignant it encapsulates women's struggle for rights in Ireland. The "Protection of Maternal Life Bill" suddenly became "The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013". All traces of women, removed. Removed in rights and in name, from pregnancy.
"The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill" proposes:
• One consultant in the case of emergency.
• Two consultants in the case of a physical risk.
• Three consultants in cases of a suicide threat.
In the Case of Suicide, the Bill proposes that the woman must go before a panel of 3 consultants: 2 psychiatrists and 1 obstetrician and their decision must be unanimous. Should the woman wish to appeal a decision, she must go before a further panel of 3 consultants, whom also must reach a unanimous decision.
So, in other words, where a woman is pregnant- suicidal-wants an abortion, she must go before a panel of doctors to 'prove' how suicidal she is. She will have to put her life in their decision, without knowing their personal stance, opinions, biases... and she has to accept if they believe her or not.
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
What measures will be taken to alleviate personal bias vs appropriate care on review panels?
In maternity care, a woman's accessibility to appropriate care often depends on the care provider she is assigned on the day and their clinical recommendations/personal opinion often influence practice, which can vary greatly. Ireland has no standardization of care in maternity services and practice and policy varies greatly regionally, between units, and between individual care providers.
What happens to the woman who gets an anti-choice obstetrician or psychiatrist on her review panel? What are the Government doing to alleviate personal bias vs appropriate care?
This morning, AIMS Ireland were sent a letter from 11 Consultants opposing opinion expressed in the Savita Halappanavar inquest. (see footnotes)
Will these Consultants be available for appointment on a review panel?
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
"The Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill" also suggests a 14 year jail sentence for women who self-induce abortion and medical professionals who perform 'illegal' abortions. Just for comparisons, the average rape sentence is 5-7 years.
This is the second piece of legislation from this Government to oppress and control pregnant women and criminalize professional practice which respect women's right to bodily integrity. This proposed Bill gives a 14yrs sentence to a woman or medical professional who performs an 'illegal' abortion, regardless of the woman's informed choice, autonomy, bodily integrity, desire, health....This Government enacted the Nurses and Midwives Act, which gives a 10yrs prison and/or €60,000 fine to a midwife who provides clinical care to a woman choosing to birth at home who doesn't fit State approved criteria, regardless of the woman's informed choice, autonomy, bodily integrity, desires, health.....
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
And here lies the crux of the issue. Pregnant women do not have the same rights as other citizens in Ireland. Where other jurisdictions strive for 'woman-centred' care in reproduction, pregnancy, birth; we remove women from her experience.
The State.
The Government.
The Courts.
The HSE.
The Electorate.
The Consultants and Psychiatrists.
The foetus.
All have been given the right to make choices for pregnant women.
Only the pregnant woman has no power over her own rights and choices.
Draft HSE Guidelines state that pregnant women need a separate guideline for consent in their health care. Pregnant women are not protected to make informed decisions, practice autonomy or bodily integrity where there is or may be 'risk' to the foetus. Regardless of if this risk is perceived or otherwise.....
AIMSI have spoken to women who have been threatened to have their baby made ward of the State for attempting to exercise their informed choice on where/how to birth. The State considers the High Court appropriate action should pregnant women refuse medical advice.
HSE: The Draft National Consent Policy - section 7.8.1 'Refusal of Treatment in Pregnancy'
"The Consent of a pregnant woman is required for all health and social care interventions. However, because of the constitutional provisions on the right to life of the 'unborn', there is legal uncertainty regarding whether a pregnant woman's right to refuse treatment extends to the refusal of treatment which puts the life of the foetus at serious risk. This matter can ultimately only be decided by the Courts. Thus, where a pregnant woman refuses treatment and this refusal may impact on the life of the foetus, it is essential that the consequences of the refusal are fully and clearly explained to the woman, and legal advice should be sought if she persists in the refusal"
Draft HSE guidelines here
Go back again. To the start.
During negotiations, something happened. Something almost subtle but yet so pointed.....Something so poignant it encapsulates women's struggle for rights in Ireland. The "Protection of Maternal Life Bill" suddenly became "The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013".
Once again, the woman has been removed.
In rights.
In name. From pregnancy.
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
** BILL UPDATE: Women could face spending pregnancy in psychiatric unit : "Irish Examiner writes, "A woman refused a termination on the grounds of suicidal intent could be forced to spend the remainder of her pregnancy in a psychiatric unit, Health Minister James Reilly has said." http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/women-could-face-spending-pregnancy-in-psychiatric-unit-230085.html
To recap, this is how the State treats women in Ireland in 2013:
If a woman is suicidal and requests a termination....lock her up and force her to continue the pregnancy.
Pregnant women who go against medical recommendations in maternity care....... doorstepped by social workers, threats to have their baby taken into State custody, threats with High Court, forced intervention via High Court, threats to have mental health assessments.
Why don't we have them do unpaid laundering services while we are at it?
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
References and more info:
Analysis: Average sentence for rape is 5 – 7 years: http://www.thejournal.ie/rape-sentencing-ireland-772129-Jan2013/
AIMS Ireland: What do Human Rights in Childbirth look like? http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013_03_01_archive.html
AIMS Ireland: HSE say women don't have the same rights: http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013/03/hse-says-pregnant-women-dont-have-same.html
AIMS Ireland: Realise Your Rights: http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013/03/realise-your-rights-birth-of-aimsi.html
Letter from 11 Consultants sent to AIMSI April 30, 2013:
Dear Sir:
Over the last few months, Ireland has been gripped by debates surrounding abortion.
The failure to legislate despite two referendums from the Irish people, despite a push from the ECHR to legislate, all came to a head following the unnecessary and tragic death of Savita Halappanavar, who died of sepsis during an inevitable miscarriage, despite requests for an abortion. A whirlwind of debate ensued and finally, last week, we were told the end was near; that draft legislation would be soon.
The speculation has been emotive, intense, and constant. The silence and wait nearly unbearable. There was nearly a collective sigh of relief, when it was announced legislation would be published by the Summer and then, apprehension as the Government indicated it would follow the terms outlined in the X case. Where would the compromises lie?
Legislating for abortion under the terms of the 'X Case' was always going to be restrictive. The X case recognizes the right to an abortion where a pregnant woman's life is at risk, including suicide, as a result of her pregnancy. No right to autonomy. No right to bodily integrity. No right to choice in instances of rape, incest, health, or any other area. But there was still ground to play for, and the rumour mill was on high alert.
This week, The Labour Party and Fine Gael hashed out the details through what we believe were intense negotiations. We heard rumours of 'bottom lines'. We hoped legislation would be woman-centred.
During negotiations, something happened. Something almost subtle but yet so pointed.....Something so poignant it encapsulates women's struggle for rights in Ireland. The "Protection of Maternal Life Bill" suddenly became "The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013". All traces of women, removed. Removed in rights and in name, from pregnancy.
"The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill" proposes:
• One consultant in the case of emergency.
• Two consultants in the case of a physical risk.
• Three consultants in cases of a suicide threat.
In the Case of Suicide, the Bill proposes that the woman must go before a panel of 3 consultants: 2 psychiatrists and 1 obstetrician and their decision must be unanimous. Should the woman wish to appeal a decision, she must go before a further panel of 3 consultants, whom also must reach a unanimous decision.
So, in other words, where a woman is pregnant- suicidal-wants an abortion, she must go before a panel of doctors to 'prove' how suicidal she is. She will have to put her life in their decision, without knowing their personal stance, opinions, biases... and she has to accept if they believe her or not.
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
What measures will be taken to alleviate personal bias vs appropriate care on review panels?
In maternity care, a woman's accessibility to appropriate care often depends on the care provider she is assigned on the day and their clinical recommendations/personal opinion often influence practice, which can vary greatly. Ireland has no standardization of care in maternity services and practice and policy varies greatly regionally, between units, and between individual care providers.
What happens to the woman who gets an anti-choice obstetrician or psychiatrist on her review panel? What are the Government doing to alleviate personal bias vs appropriate care?
This morning, AIMS Ireland were sent a letter from 11 Consultants opposing opinion expressed in the Savita Halappanavar inquest. (see footnotes)
Will these Consultants be available for appointment on a review panel?
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
"The Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill" also suggests a 14 year jail sentence for women who self-induce abortion and medical professionals who perform 'illegal' abortions. Just for comparisons, the average rape sentence is 5-7 years.
This is the second piece of legislation from this Government to oppress and control pregnant women and criminalize professional practice which respect women's right to bodily integrity. This proposed Bill gives a 14yrs sentence to a woman or medical professional who performs an 'illegal' abortion, regardless of the woman's informed choice, autonomy, bodily integrity, desire, health....This Government enacted the Nurses and Midwives Act, which gives a 10yrs prison and/or €60,000 fine to a midwife who provides clinical care to a woman choosing to birth at home who doesn't fit State approved criteria, regardless of the woman's informed choice, autonomy, bodily integrity, desires, health.....
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
And here lies the crux of the issue. Pregnant women do not have the same rights as other citizens in Ireland. Where other jurisdictions strive for 'woman-centred' care in reproduction, pregnancy, birth; we remove women from her experience.
The State.
The Government.
The Courts.
The HSE.
The Electorate.
The Consultants and Psychiatrists.
The foetus.
All have been given the right to make choices for pregnant women.
Only the pregnant woman has no power over her own rights and choices.
Draft HSE Guidelines state that pregnant women need a separate guideline for consent in their health care. Pregnant women are not protected to make informed decisions, practice autonomy or bodily integrity where there is or may be 'risk' to the foetus. Regardless of if this risk is perceived or otherwise.....
AIMSI have spoken to women who have been threatened to have their baby made ward of the State for attempting to exercise their informed choice on where/how to birth. The State considers the High Court appropriate action should pregnant women refuse medical advice.
HSE: The Draft National Consent Policy - section 7.8.1 'Refusal of Treatment in Pregnancy'
"The Consent of a pregnant woman is required for all health and social care interventions. However, because of the constitutional provisions on the right to life of the 'unborn', there is legal uncertainty regarding whether a pregnant woman's right to refuse treatment extends to the refusal of treatment which puts the life of the foetus at serious risk. This matter can ultimately only be decided by the Courts. Thus, where a pregnant woman refuses treatment and this refusal may impact on the life of the foetus, it is essential that the consequences of the refusal are fully and clearly explained to the woman, and legal advice should be sought if she persists in the refusal"
Draft HSE guidelines here
Go back again. To the start.
During negotiations, something happened. Something almost subtle but yet so pointed.....Something so poignant it encapsulates women's struggle for rights in Ireland. The "Protection of Maternal Life Bill" suddenly became "The Protection of Life during Pregnancy Bill 2013".
Once again, the woman has been removed.
In rights.
In name. From pregnancy.
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
** BILL UPDATE: Women could face spending pregnancy in psychiatric unit : "Irish Examiner writes, "A woman refused a termination on the grounds of suicidal intent could be forced to spend the remainder of her pregnancy in a psychiatric unit, Health Minister James Reilly has said." http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/women-could-face-spending-pregnancy-in-psychiatric-unit-230085.html
To recap, this is how the State treats women in Ireland in 2013:
If a woman is suicidal and requests a termination....lock her up and force her to continue the pregnancy.
Pregnant women who go against medical recommendations in maternity care....... doorstepped by social workers, threats to have their baby taken into State custody, threats with High Court, forced intervention via High Court, threats to have mental health assessments.
Why don't we have them do unpaid laundering services while we are at it?
Assuming. Dictating. Humiliating. Degrading. Distressing.
Ireland: No Country for Pregnant Women.
References and more info:
Analysis: Average sentence for rape is 5 – 7 years: http://www.thejournal.ie/rape-sentencing-ireland-772129-Jan2013/
AIMS Ireland: What do Human Rights in Childbirth look like? http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013_03_01_archive.html
AIMS Ireland: HSE say women don't have the same rights: http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013/03/hse-says-pregnant-women-dont-have-same.html
AIMS Ireland: Realise Your Rights: http://nocountryforpregnantwomen.blogspot.ie/2013/03/realise-your-rights-birth-of-aimsi.html
Letter from 11 Consultants sent to AIMSI April 30, 2013:
Dear Sir:
The recent inquest on Ms Savita Halappanavar has raised important issues about hospital infection in obstetrics. Much of the public attention appears to have been directed at the expert opinion of Dr Peter Boylan who suggested that Irish law prevented necessary treatment to save Ms Halappanavar's life. We would suggest that that this is a personal view, not an expert one.
Furthermore, it is impossible for Dr. Boylan, or for any doctor, to predict with certainty the clinical course and outcome in the case of Savita Halappanavar where sepsis arose from the virulent and multi drug-resistant organism, E.coli ESBL.
What we can say with certainty is that where ruptured membranes are accompanied by any clinical or bio-chemical marker of infection, Irish obstetricians understand that they can intervene with early delivery of the baby if necessary. Unfortunately, the inquest shows that in Galway University Hospital the diagnosis of chorioamnionitis was delayed and relevant information was not noted and acted upon.
The facts as produced at the inquest show this tragic case to be primarily about the management of sepsis, and Dr Boylan's opinion on the effect of Irish law did not appear to be shared by the Coroner, or the jury, of the Inquest.
Obstetric sepsis is unfortunately on the increase and is now the leading cause of maternal death reported in the UK Confidential Enquiry into Maternal Deaths. Additionally there are many well-documented fatalities from sepsis in women following termination of pregnancy. To concentrate on the legal position regarding abortion in the light of such a case as that in Galway does not assist our services to pregnant women.
It is clear that maternal mortality in developed countries is rising, in the USA, Canada, Britain, Denmark, Netherlands and other European countries. The last Confidential Enquiry in Britain (which now includes Ireland) recommended a "return to basics" and stated that many maternal deaths are related to failure to observe simple clinical signs such as fever, headache and changes in pulse rate and blood pressure. Many of the failings highlighted in Galway have been described before in these and other reports.
The additional problem of multi-resistant organisms causing infection, largely as a result of antibiotic use and abuse, is a serious cause of concern and may lead to higher death rates in all areas of medicine.
Ireland’s maternal health record is one of the best in the world in terms of our low rate of maternal death (including Galway hospital). The case in Galway was one of the worst cases of sepsis ever experienced in that hospital, and the diagnosis of ESBL septicaemia was almost unprecedented amongst Irish maternity units.
It is important that all obstetrical units in Ireland reflect on the findings of the events in Galway and learn how to improve care for pregnant women. To reduce it to a polemical argument about abortion may lead to more - not fewer - deaths in the future.
Yours sincerely,
Dr. John Monaghan, DCH FRCPI FRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Portiuncula Hospital, Galway.
Dr. Cyril Thornton, MB BCh MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Cork Clinic, Cork.
Dr. Eamon Mc Guinness, MB BCh MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Mount Carmel Hospital, Dublin.
Dr. Trevor Hayes, MB BCh FRCS MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist, St. Luke’s General Hospital, Kilkenny.
Dr. Chris King, MB DCH MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Letterkenny General Hospital.
Dr. Eileen Reilly, MB ChB MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Galway Clinic, Galway.
Prof John Bonnar, MD FRCPI FRCOG Professor Emeritus Obstetrics & Gynaecology,
Trinity College Dublin.
Prof Eamon O’Dwyer, MB MAO LLB FRCPI FRCOG Professor Emeritus Obstetrics & Gynaecology, NUI Galway.
Prof Stephen Cusack, MB BCh FRCSI Consultant in Emergency Medicine,
Cork University Hospital.
Dr. Rory Page, MB BCh FFA RCSI Consultant Anaesthetist, Cavan General Hospital.
Dr. James Clair, MB BCh PhD FRCPath Consultant Microbiologist,
Mercy University Hospital, Cork.
Furthermore, it is impossible for Dr. Boylan, or for any doctor, to predict with certainty the clinical course and outcome in the case of Savita Halappanavar where sepsis arose from the virulent and multi drug-resistant organism, E.coli ESBL.
What we can say with certainty is that where ruptured membranes are accompanied by any clinical or bio-chemical marker of infection, Irish obstetricians understand that they can intervene with early delivery of the baby if necessary. Unfortunately, the inquest shows that in Galway University Hospital the diagnosis of chorioamnionitis was delayed and relevant information was not noted and acted upon.
The facts as produced at the inquest show this tragic case to be primarily about the management of sepsis, and Dr Boylan's opinion on the effect of Irish law did not appear to be shared by the Coroner, or the jury, of the Inquest.
Obstetric sepsis is unfortunately on the increase and is now the leading cause of maternal death reported in the UK Confidential Enquiry into Maternal Deaths. Additionally there are many well-documented fatalities from sepsis in women following termination of pregnancy. To concentrate on the legal position regarding abortion in the light of such a case as that in Galway does not assist our services to pregnant women.
It is clear that maternal mortality in developed countries is rising, in the USA, Canada, Britain, Denmark, Netherlands and other European countries. The last Confidential Enquiry in Britain (which now includes Ireland) recommended a "return to basics" and stated that many maternal deaths are related to failure to observe simple clinical signs such as fever, headache and changes in pulse rate and blood pressure. Many of the failings highlighted in Galway have been described before in these and other reports.
The additional problem of multi-resistant organisms causing infection, largely as a result of antibiotic use and abuse, is a serious cause of concern and may lead to higher death rates in all areas of medicine.
Ireland’s maternal health record is one of the best in the world in terms of our low rate of maternal death (including Galway hospital). The case in Galway was one of the worst cases of sepsis ever experienced in that hospital, and the diagnosis of ESBL septicaemia was almost unprecedented amongst Irish maternity units.
It is important that all obstetrical units in Ireland reflect on the findings of the events in Galway and learn how to improve care for pregnant women. To reduce it to a polemical argument about abortion may lead to more - not fewer - deaths in the future.
Yours sincerely,
Dr. John Monaghan, DCH FRCPI FRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Portiuncula Hospital, Galway.
Dr. Cyril Thornton, MB BCh MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Cork Clinic, Cork.
Dr. Eamon Mc Guinness, MB BCh MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Mount Carmel Hospital, Dublin.
Dr. Trevor Hayes, MB BCh FRCS MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist, St. Luke’s General Hospital, Kilkenny.
Dr. Chris King, MB DCH MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Letterkenny General Hospital.
Dr. Eileen Reilly, MB ChB MRCOG Consultant Obstetrician/Gynecologist,
Galway Clinic, Galway.
Prof John Bonnar, MD FRCPI FRCOG Professor Emeritus Obstetrics & Gynaecology,
Trinity College Dublin.
Prof Eamon O’Dwyer, MB MAO LLB FRCPI FRCOG Professor Emeritus Obstetrics & Gynaecology, NUI Galway.
Prof Stephen Cusack, MB BCh FRCSI Consultant in Emergency Medicine,
Cork University Hospital.
Dr. Rory Page, MB BCh FFA RCSI Consultant Anaesthetist, Cavan General Hospital.
Dr. James Clair, MB BCh PhD FRCPath Consultant Microbiologist,
Mercy University Hospital, Cork.
Monday, 22 April 2013
PQ Reply: HSE Draft Consent Guidelines breach Women's Human Rights
QUESTION NO: 1159
DÁIL QUESTION addressed to the Minister for Health (Dr. James Reilly)
by Deputy Clare Daly
for WRITTEN ANSWER on 16/04/2013
* To ask the Minister for Health with regard to the Draft National Consent Policy in relation to refusal of treatment in pregnancy, if the guideline which says that a woman's refusal of treatment which may impact on the life of the foetus must require a legal opinion to be sought and if this is not a serious breach of the woman's human rights regarding her own decision making with regard to giving birth.
Clare Daly T.D.
REPLY.
An adult with capacity can refuse all forms of treatment (including life-sustaining treatment) even where such a refusal may be considered unwise and/or conflict with prevailing medical advice and could lead to his/her death. The case [In the matter of a Ward of Court (withholding medical treatment) (No. 2) [1996] 2 IR 79] established that an adult with capacity has the right to refuse medical treatment to facilitate a natural death. A number of subsequent court cases have reinforced the rulings from the Ward of Court case, in particular JM v The Board of Management of St Vincent’s Hospital[2002] 1 IR 321 and Fitzpatrick v FK (No.2) [2008] IEHC 104. However, this situation becomes more complex in the case of pregnancy given that the rights of both parties (i.e. the mother and unborn) need to be considered. As the HSE's Consent Policy remains in draft form it would be inappropriate for me to comment on it at this stage. I expect the policy to be finalised shortly
Thursday, 4 April 2013
Women continue to raise concerns over early pregnancy concerns/miscarriage care in Galway
Since the death of Savita Halappanavar, AIMS Ireland has been contacted by concerned women regarding their care in early pregnancy and during miscarriage in Galway's UCGH. Many women prefer to remain anonymous, others ask to share their stories.
In March, AIMS Ireland shared the story of a woman who was left waiting three weeks during a miscarriage without care. As a result she travelled abroad for treatment.
Her story is available here: STORY
AIMS Ireland has been contacted by another woman today with regards to her treatment and delay for early pregnancy assessment despite bleeding and GP referral. This is her story in her own words.
I want to make you aware of a particularly unhappy situation in Galway University Hospital at present at their EPU.
The wait time for a scan at the early pregnancy unit is currently between a week and two weeks. They do not offer any scan services at weekends.
These scan appointments are following GP referral for bleeding and cramping.
I myself have been spotting, yet following a letter from my doctor, they offered me a scan date 2 weeks later. This is with a previous history of miscarriage. My symptoms worsened and I presented myself at the unit, to be offered an internal and a blood test, but a point blank refusal to scan me despite severe pain and heavy bleeding. The doctors that I dealt with at the EPU this time were actually very nice, but you could see that their hands were tied also. It is difficult to endure any kind of bleeding in pregnancy, but at least a scan gives you peace of mind either way, be it a good or bad outcome. Nobody should have to wait so long to learn of that outcome. I have been so stressed and anxious - difficulty eating/sleeping - as a result of this huge almost inhumane delay to be scanned. It is not good enough. Nobody should have to wait so long to learn of that outcome.
In the end, I resorted to a private scan as I needed to know. Luckily all is ok. But what about those for whom a private scan is not an option? Are we women in Galway not entitled to equivalent care as received in Cork or Limerick or Dublin?
If I broke a bone, would I have to wait two weeks for an X-ray? No. Why then, if a woman bleeds in early pregnancy, should she wait two weeks for an ultrasound?
If you have an experience you would like to share or if you would like support following an experience please contact us at support@aimsireland.com
In March, AIMS Ireland shared the story of a woman who was left waiting three weeks during a miscarriage without care. As a result she travelled abroad for treatment.
Her story is available here: STORY
AIMS Ireland has been contacted by another woman today with regards to her treatment and delay for early pregnancy assessment despite bleeding and GP referral. This is her story in her own words.
I want to make you aware of a particularly unhappy situation in Galway University Hospital at present at their EPU.
The wait time for a scan at the early pregnancy unit is currently between a week and two weeks. They do not offer any scan services at weekends.
These scan appointments are following GP referral for bleeding and cramping.
I myself have been spotting, yet following a letter from my doctor, they offered me a scan date 2 weeks later. This is with a previous history of miscarriage. My symptoms worsened and I presented myself at the unit, to be offered an internal and a blood test, but a point blank refusal to scan me despite severe pain and heavy bleeding. The doctors that I dealt with at the EPU this time were actually very nice, but you could see that their hands were tied also. It is difficult to endure any kind of bleeding in pregnancy, but at least a scan gives you peace of mind either way, be it a good or bad outcome. Nobody should have to wait so long to learn of that outcome. I have been so stressed and anxious - difficulty eating/sleeping - as a result of this huge almost inhumane delay to be scanned. It is not good enough. Nobody should have to wait so long to learn of that outcome.
In the end, I resorted to a private scan as I needed to know. Luckily all is ok. But what about those for whom a private scan is not an option? Are we women in Galway not entitled to equivalent care as received in Cork or Limerick or Dublin?
If I broke a bone, would I have to wait two weeks for an X-ray? No. Why then, if a woman bleeds in early pregnancy, should she wait two weeks for an ultrasound?
If you have an experience you would like to share or if you would like support following an experience please contact us at support@aimsireland.com
Wednesday, 3 April 2013
Guest Blog: Does your doctor love your baby more than you do?
Does your doctor love your baby more than you do?
Guest blog byCristen Pascucci, ImprovingBirth.org, USA
Guest blog byCristen Pascucci, ImprovingBirth.org, USA
The gift of motherhood has been called divine. To be given a baby—to nurture him in the womb, give birth to him, and bear responsibility for his every physical, emotional, and spiritual need even after that—is perhaps the greatest responsibility we are given as a species.
The physical ability to create this life and release it into the world is what distinguishes women from men. It’s what we do. It is what makes our bodies different. And it’s what often makes our lives very different; our responsibility as mothers is embedded in our chemistry, in our bones, and in our souls. We never forget that we are mothers.
It is an odd thing to me, then, that so many women are expected to forget what we are during the very event that makes us mothers. We sacrifice our bodies, time, energy, youth, and our own needs so that we may give to our babies while they are in the womb and after it. Yet, at the life-changing event of their actual births, we are often expected to hand over the reigns to someone else. Why is that?
A woman is not less deserving of respect at birth. She is more deserving of respect as she undertakes her greatest responsibility in life. We were not given the gift of life to be undermined by others as we bring it into the world.
Let’s examine the expectations of a mother giving birth. Ideally, she will have a glowing, healthy baby, and she will come through birth healthy and ready to mother, as well. She cannot wait for that first precious moment when she catches sight of her mysterious little roommate, and she longs to hold him close, to smell him, to protect and warm him, to nurse him from her body with the best food on the planet. Her goal is the safest, smoothest birth possible so that she is physically capable of caring for her newborn and no complications are created for future births. And, of course, because his birth is a major life event for them, she wants her memories to be good ones.
If she’s done her research, she’ll know that science firmly backs what she instinctively wants—the skin-to-skin contact regulates his temperature and heart rate, the proximity to his mother and the sound of her voice soothes him. He cries less than if he is away from her. The breastmilk he receives supplies him with perfect nutrients. Science has not come close to duplicating that formula, nor can it reproduce the benefits of bonding that occur with it that are so beneficial to the brain and social development of our babies.
Perhaps her care providers have the same expectations; perhaps they don’t. The truth of the matter is that even the best of care providers is under competing pressures: pressures of time, of cost, of administrative policies, of practices that are meant to keep the healthcare machine running at a certain pace and with certain outcomes as priorities. Each of these pressures and priorities serves to push the optimal well-being of mom and baby just a little further down the list.
In the U.S., for example, we know that the single biggest factor (see here and here) as to whether or not a low-risk woman receives a Cesarean section is the practice patterns of the providers with whom she gives birth—not her individual circumstances. The odds of a woman giving birth by surgery are as much as 15 times greater in one hospital over another. In our case, scheduling constraints, legal liability, and insurance reimbursements are very real factors in the care we receive.
When other factors take precedent—when surgery, induction by drugs, or instrumental deliveries are used a little more frequently than is necessary for mom’s and baby’s sake—we end up with births that are more traumatic, more complicated, and more risky than they might have been. We end up with babies whose systems are flooded with drugs at birth, who are bruised and upset, who may be separated from their mothers in those first critical moments. We end up with mothers who are dealing with negative physical and emotional consequences of birth, feeling “blue,” rather than enjoying their babies at this defining period of attachment. And when surgery is employed, we end up with women for whom each subsequent birth by surgery is more and more dangerous for her and her babies.
Imagine a doctor whose individual practices and preferences lead him to cut open 50% of the women who come to him for his services. Or, perhaps it's a doctor who believes that Cesarean surgery is "almost risk-free"--contrary to every scrap of current evidence (see here, here, and here). Would we give these men unilateral authority to decide whether or not we give birth by surgery?
These things are not acceptable, in the United States, in Ireland, or anywhere else. Respect for motherhood, for the mother-baby cycle, and for the life event of birth is a human right. It’s time to demand that we are respected as the decision-makers about our bodies and our babies.
The state does not have a uterus nor does it have breasts. It was not given the gift of the creation of life and it is not entitled to your body or your baby. It is not more invested in our children than we are.
Does your doctor love your baby more than you do? Does your government lie awake watching him breathe at night? If the answer is “no”—and I believe it is—then who dares to come between a mother and her baby?
As American parents, Irish parents, any parents, it is our right and our responsibility to make decisions that affect every facet of our children’s lives. It is no different in birth.
We must protect our bodies if we are to protect our babies. And no one can protect your baby like you can.
References:
Huffington Post, March 6, 2013, "C-Section rates vary across U.S. hospitals"
Huffington Post, March 6, 2013, "C-Section rates vary across U.S. hospitals"
ImprovingBirth.org, January 23, 2013, "U.S. Hospitals held accountable for C-section rates"
VBACFacts.com, December 9, 2012, "Why cesareans are a big deal to you, your wife, and your daughter"
Childbirth Connection, 2012, "Cesarean section: what you need to know about c-section"
American College of Obstetricians and Gynocologists' News Release, March 21, 2013, "Vaginal delivery recommended over maternal request cesarean"
For more current, science-based research, go to www.EvidenceBasedBirth.com
Cristen Pascucci joined ImprovingBirth.org--a national nonprofit in the U.S. run by and for mothers--after the birth of her baby in December 2011. She is now vice president of the organization, which advocates for evidence-based care and humanity in childbirth, and she writes regularly about the need for respect in childbirth. Prior to that, she was a political and communications strategist in Baltimore, Maryland.
Thursday, 28 March 2013
What do 'Human Rights in Childbirth' look like?
When you think of
‘Human Rights in Childbirth’ – what do you see?
Do you see a certain kind of birth?
Do you see a certain image?
Do you think that it is not about you?
Human Rights in childbirth means that a pregnant woman’s
basic rights and freedoms are the same as any other person. A woman cannot have these rights removed
simply for being pregnant or based on where she lives, sexual orientation,
nationality, religion, or any other status.
Women can expect appropriate care. ‘Appropriate care’ means that the
psychological and physical welfare of a woman is protected. Women shall be
treated humanely. Women shall receive care based on the best evidence available
rather than based on routine hospital policies - which do not treat women on an
individual basis and are sometimes shown to do more harm than good. Appropriate
care means a woman is respected in making decisions which will affect her and
her baby.
Human Rights in childbirth affects all women, in all types
of care. And these rights must be
protected equally.
Unfortunately, at times, these rights can be denied. This is
often called a ‘breach’ or ‘violation’ of human rights. Some women who have
given birth instinctively feel they have been denied their rights, that
something just didn’t feel right. Others may not be sure.
What does a human
rights violation look like?
Sometimes, women say they picture a human rights abuse in
extremes. AIMSI hear women say all the time “my birth wasn’t that bad compared
to others”. In reality, a breach of rights can look a lot more subtle. Some examples of Human Rights breaches in
childbirth are: having an examination or procedure done without your
permission, cutting you without asking, or breaking your waters without giving
you the full information. Breaches can also be how you were treated. Were you
listened to? Were your choices respected? How were you treated? Were you cared
for and treated in a dignified and respected manner? Were you
given information on important decisions during your labour and birth?
Sometimes, seeking your permission can be implied. For example: “I am just
going to give you some help” as they are cutting you. This is not consent and
is a breach of your rights.
Any denial of a woman’s rights is not OK.
What does Human
Rights in Childbirth look like?
The right to choose your hospital.
The right to choose your care provider, doctor or midwife.
The right to choose the type of care for your birth: public,
semi private, private consultant led,
midwife led (MLU, DOMINO) in hospital, or home birth.
The right to be an active member in decision making during
your pregnancy, labour and birth.
The right to be given all the necessary information –
benefits and risks – of a test, treatment, or procedure to help you make a
decision. Benefits and risks means that any possible side-effects are explained to you, both for and against. You should also be given the opportunity to discuss 'doing nothing' - asking for more time before making a decision and if there any alternative suggestions you can try.
The right to give your consent, the right to more time, and
the right to refuse.
The right to have your concerns and preferences respected.
The right to be treated in a dignified and compassionate
manner.
The right to have enough staff to look after you.
The right to privacy.
The right to have pain relief, or not.
The right to have maternity care which is based on best
evidence available.
The right to a second medical opinion.
The right to make decisions on the care of your baby.
The right to equality – all women are treated the same.
A recent decision by the European Court of Human Rights
found that it is a basic right for women to decide the terms on which she
becomes a parent. That means women have the right to decide where and how she
gives birth. If you feel your rights were denied, AIMS Ireland would like to
support you. AIMS Ireland will help you in a complaint. We also have legal
experts who can talk to you and provide you with advice. Additionally, our
legal experts can assist in a legal complaint to the European Court of Human
Rights. AIMS Ireland wants to hear from you if you feel your human rights were
breached in any way during your pregnancy, labour and birth. We are interested
in collecting stories from women with a view to publishing them. Your voice
matters and your story will help gain
awareness and protect women’s rights.
If you would like more information on any of the issues here
please contact us at
Monday, 25 March 2013
Realise Your Rights - The Birth of AIMSI
In March 2007, a group of women came together with a common
goal: to help other women who had been neglected, coerced, disrespected
- and sometimes abused - in their maternity care to realise they are
not alone. The Association for Improvements in the Maternity Services Ireland (AIMSI) believed that women were not being supported and respected in their childbirth choices and set out to campaign and lobby to change the culture of birth in Ireland. For the past 6 years, AIMSI has put in thousands of volunteer hours providing support, writing letters, researching evidence-based care in childbirth, participating at committee level to improve maternity services and making certain that the respect of women in childbirth is a right, not a privilege.
There is a long history in Ireland of women and their bodies
being the domain of the State. Looking back through the annals of time,
there are countless stories of women being told they must give up their
babies because they were seen as 'unfit mothers' or that they must be
committed to an institution, such as a Magdalene Laundry, often for no
other reason other than they were not compliant with the sociocultural
'rules' of the State. Even some things that seem unrelated, such as the
State obliging women to leave paid employment after marriage or making
it legally impossible for a woman to petition for divorce from an
abusive spouse, set the tone for many women to accept that they had very
little to no autonomy or self-determination in relation to their bodies
and their lives.
In recent years, thanks to the tireless work of activists and advocacy groups, like AIMSI, Ireland
has moved on from the explicit discrimination of women, but these cultural
attitudes are very hard to shift after years of indoctrination and
justification. Recently an article in The Journal described
the "grotesque and violent" treatment of women at the hands of surgeon,
Dr. Michael Neary. It is widely known that Dr. Neary removed the wombs
of at least 129 women and
that many of these women are still waiting for compensation for this
brutal and unnecessary surgery. The most poignant comment in The Journal article is that of one of Neary's victims when she says:
“Even when the story broke years later, I was still convinced I needed it. I told people, ‘I wouldn’t be one of them’. I believed he totally saved my life. I did actually think he was a good man who knew what he was doing, and that he was doing it for the right reasons.”
This is what many women who attend a hospital birth and who undergo surgical interventions, from an episiotomy to Caesarean section, often
are told - that the interventions a woman has been subject to are
necessary and have saved her from pain and suffering or even from death. Women who have
given birth in Irish maternity hospitals often tell dark stories of
being threatened into complying with treatment (usually with the "dead baby card") or
of being refused extra time in labour, all for the sake of medically
managing their labour. The policy of Active Management of Labour (AML)
was devised in the 1970s in the National Maternity Hospital in Dublin and is now practiced and taught internationally.
The basic policy of AML includes that:
- each labouring woman will fit into a standardised method of care whereby she will dilate at 1cm/hour
- a woman will have a maximum of 12 hours to labour (including latent labour)
- a woman will undergo routine amniotomy or 'breaking of the waters' by a midwife/doctor
- the administration of synthetic oxytocin (Syntocinon®/Pitocin®) will be used to augment, or speed up, labour
- a medical decision will be made regarding surgical intervention - episiotomy, forceps, ventouse, c-section - in the case of prolonged labour (+12 hours)
- the 3rd stage of labour - delivery of the placenta - will be managed using a uterotonic drug, such as Syntometrine®
On the surface, AML sounds as if it is a method of protecting
women from facing complications due to a painful and prolonged labour
and birth - but in reality it is an inconsistent and unreliable method of controlling birth
that solely focuses on the management of labour and has little regard
for the woman who is actively labouring. The consequence of a
medicalised birth, such as AML, is that women have begun to lose trust
in their ability to manage their own labours. The talk of risk and
intervention by midwives and doctors leads women to believe that there
are inherent dangers in childbirth. Research that is used to support
claims about the risks in childbirth are methodologically weak at best
and spurious at worst. Of course, as in any medical emergency, there are
instances where surgical intervention is necessary for the health and
well being of the patient. But how does this explain the increasing
rates of intervention in maternity care, such as a steep rise in
inductions, epidurals, episiotomies and c-sections? Or even more
telling, how can stark regional variations in these interventions across Ireland be explained?
These are the questions that AIMSI vigorously
investigates on behalf of all women who are involved in the Irish
maternity services. Our mission is not to deny that some births will
necessitate medical intervention - it is to ask for the validity and
respect of the woman's voice when making informed decisions in her
maternity care, whether it involves an emergency or not. While the vast majority of births are non-emergencies
and require no intervention, the following statistics in maternity care
contradict this and demand closer scrutiny:
- the sharp rise in inductions of labour (approximately 1 in 3 pregnancies are induced in Ireland)
- the increased use of epidural for pain relief (this occurs for approximately 70% of first time births in Ireland, and at slightly lower rates for subsequent births)
- the inconsistency in rates of episotomy (from less than 2% to more than 27% across maternity units in Ireland)
- the broad variations in c-section rates in Irish hospitals (anywhere from 22% to 43%)
It is simply implausible to say that these increased rates of
intervention have saved lives. All scientific research is governed by
the phrase: correlation does not imply causation. Therefore, it is
almost impossible to determine the validity of interventions in
childbirth after the fact. The glaring omission in AML is the risk
that the above interventions all carry. The misperception of these
interventions being "almost risk free"
means that there is very little chance of accurately assessing the risk
to the mother versus the risk to the unborn baby. This is further
confounded by Draft HSE National Guidelines on Consent which state that a pregnant woman's right to refuse treatment must be balanced with the right to life of the unborn.
Many women will report to friends and family that if it weren't for a given intervention, her baby may not have been born healthy or alive. This is the
power that a policy such as AML has over women who are pregnant,
labouring or giving birth. The control of her labour and delivery by the
'experts' means that she should be grateful that they have intervened.
Like the quote from one of Dr. Neary's victims above - a woman is
expected not to ask questions and to accept that she and her birthing
baby "needed" the intervention(s). AML has not only ensured that women's
labour is managed, it has also perpetuated a myth that all
interventions are being done "for the right reasons". Even the doctors
who originally invented AML were very open about the primary reason for
controlling labour, and it was not to simply reduce c-sections or to
nobly save lives - it was invented to reduce the number of hours each
woman would require the care of the obstetric team. It is aptly summed
up in this article by Dr. Marsden Wagner. He in turn quotes from an article by Marc Keirse called A final comment - managing the uterus, the woman or whom? that appeared in the journal, Birth in 1993:
"It would appear that there are a large number of situations in which augmentation of labor is not directed at correcting a perceived abnormality in a woman's labor, but at shortening the labor commitment of her care givers"
It
is a fallacy of logic to take a result, such as a healthy baby, and to
attribute a number of interventions as the cause of that baby being
healthy. Likewise, it is difficult to gather reliable and accurate
statistics on the number of births that require no intervention because
the standard of care in Ireland includes routine intervention, whether
it is needed or not. One only has to flip through the partograms in any
birth unit or to talk to a student midwife to get a clear picture of how
rare it is to have a birth that is intervention-free. The strongest
argument for the revision of AML is that it was originally introduced as
a method of reducing c-sections and "the labor commitment of
caregivers", but the rapid increase in c-sections and other
interventions across Ireland (and internationally, since we exported AML) show that it has patently failed in this
outcome. The paucity of reliable statistical data coupled with the lack
of a national policy in maternity services makes for an ad hoc system of
care. It is impossible to have consistent, evidence-based research
policies and standards of care in pregnancy, labour and childbirth when
each unit is operating as its own self-regulated medical outpost.
AIMS Ireland are trying to change these unsupported policies one woman at a time. Education, information and support are integral to bolstering women's confidence in their ability to birth and in their choices of how and where they wish to birth. Until the veil has been lifted on the dearth of evidence that supports AML and the risk of many of these interventions is highlighted and shared with birthing mothers, then improvements in the maternity services will be slow to positively change.
AIMS Ireland urges women to realise their rights in their choices on how and where to birth:
- the right to an informed second opinion
- the right to informed choice in the case of routine procedures such as electronic fetal monitoring (EFM), amniotomy, induction, movement in labour and position for birth
- the right to informed refusal in the case of the procedures listed above and other routine interventions, such as pain relief (epidural, pethidine, gas and air), valsalva maneuver - or 'purple pushing' - and episiotomy
- the right to choose between a home birth or hospital birth (in spite of restrictions that the HSE are attempting to place on this choice)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Look out for a follow up blog post that will look at the reliance on technology in maternity services and a more detailed explanation on the 'cascade of intervention'.
More information on birth statistics in Ireland can be found here.
If you have any queries or would like more information or if you have been affected by your birth experience, please contact AIMS Ireland: info@aimsireland.com or support@aimsireland.com
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